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06 March 2012

Over the next month, we will be previewing all 30 MLB teams for the upcoming fantasy season. We'll go over everything from which players are new to the team, to which ones have left. Who should you draft, who should you avoid, who should you heckle, who should you stalk and send a lock of your hair to, who should you want to throw a baggie full of your own urine at. You know. All the important shit to prepare you for your draft.

BOSTON RED SOX

So what about last year? Cut and paste what I wrote about Atlanta. Boston had a bad April, kicked all kinds of ass from May - August, then got drunk and ate too much fried chicken in September and missed the playoffs on the final day of the season.

So who's playing where? Projected lineup courtesy of Rotochamp.com. Stats are from 2011. RNK is the player's ranking at that position from our fantasy rankings.

Player

POS

2011 Team

AB

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OBP

SLG

RNK

1

Jacoby Ellsbury

OF

BOS

660

119

32

105

39

.321

.376

.552

4th

2

Carl Crawford

OF

BOS

506

65

11

56

18

.255

.289

.405

23rd

3

Dustin Pedroia

2B

BOS

635

102

21

91

26

.307

.387

.474

2nd

4

Adrian Gonzalez

1B

BOS

630

108

27

117

1

.338

.410

.548

4th

5

David Ortiz

DH

BOS

525

84

29

96

1

.309

.398

.554

NR

6

Kevin Youkilis

3B

BOS

431

68

17

80

3

.258

.373

.459

13th

7

Cody Ross

OF

SF

405

54

14

52

5

.240

.325

.405

92nd

8

Jarrod Saltalamacchia

C

BOS

358

52

16

56

1

.235

.288

.450

23rd

9

Mike Aviles

SS

KC/BOS

286

31

7

39

14

.255

.289

.409

26th

Who do I draft? Take your pick. Ellsbury is a first round pick. Pedroia usually goes in the second. Ortiz is good for 25-30 homers even in a bad year.

Who do I avoid? Injury concerns about Youk and Crawford aside, I'm going to go out on a limb and say Adrian Gonzalez. Obviously in a keeper league you keep him and don't give it a second thought. But in redraft leagues, he's going way higher than I like. Homers were down last year, and Boston isn't actually too friendly to left handed power hitters. His insanely high BABIP is going to drop, bringing his average to about the .280 to .300 level. Coming into his second full season after shoulder surgery, there's a chance he goes bananas and hits 40 homers like everyone expected last year. But if he only hit 25, it wouldn't surprise me. Now a .300 average, 25 homers and well over 100 RBI is nothing to sneeze at, but that's not what you want out of the 6th or 7th pick in the draft.

Who do I keep an eye on? SALTY! Dude hit 10 homers in the second half last year. He's got a chance at 15-20 with an average that won't murder you too much every week. As the 23rd catcher off the board, you could do a lot worse.

So who's in the rotation? Projected lineup courtesy of Rotochamp.com. Stats are from 2011. RNK is the player's ranking at that position from our fantasy rankings.

Player

POS

2011 Team

IP

W

L

ERA

WHIP

K

BB

RNK

1

Jon Lester

SP

BOS

191.2

15

9

3.47

1.26

182

75

16th

2

Josh Beckett

SP

BOS

193.0

13

7

2.89

1.03

175

52

25th

3

Clay Buchholz

SP

BOS

82.2

6

3

3.48

1.29

60

31

58th

4

Daniel Bard

SP

BOS

73.0

2

9

3.33

0.96

74

24

71st

5

Alfredo Aceves

SP

BOS

114.0

16

5

2.61

1.11

80

42

93rd

Who do I draft? Pencil in Lesterfor the same stat line as last year: ERA between 3.20 and 3.50, 180 - 200 K's. The only thing that seems to fluctuate is wins. Beckett won't be as awesome as last year, but he'll certainly be better than he was in 2010.

Who do I avoid? If you think Aceves can be a full-time starter this season and still have an ERA under 3.00, there's a money league I'd like to invite you to. There's no way he repeats the insanely low BABIP (.231) and he doesn't strike enough hitters out to be as dominant as he was last year. I call it luck. I also call maybe 15 starts over the season with an ERA between 3.80 and 4.20 (Heh...4:20, mannnnn...). Avoid Bard too, at least at the position he's being drafted in. Reliever-to-starter transitions are always risky, especially in the first year. If he drops to you late, go for it. otherwise let him be someone else's problem.

Who do I keep an eye on? Clay Buchholz had a stress fracture in his back last season. The year before he was not too shabby. Keep an eye on him in Spring Training.

05 March 2012

I've never been to Wisconsin Dells, but I have seen the commercials. And, since The Dells can afford to advertise, I imagine that dozens of families pack their cars every summer and drive to the middle of Wisconsin to be gouged at slightly more elaborate water parks than the ones nearer to home. I don't envy the parents, who will eventually face the demoralizing prospect of having to endure a long, hot, boring car ride back to their suburban hellholes with their over-stimulated children once their vacations are over. If only there were away to scare their kids straight for a few hours!

If she weighs the same as a duck...- she's made of wood.- And therefore?- A witch!

Thankfully, tucked away in downtown Wisconsin Dells is The Museum of Historic Torture Devices, which provides over 40 exhibits for spiteful parents to consider as they wonder how on earth they raised such ungrateful brats.

The Museum of Historic Torture Devices offers a private collection of classic torture devices from around the world. For about $7 per person, you can threaten your children with The Rack, The Iron Gag, The Chinese Death Cage, the Dunking Stool, or good ol' fashioned Thumb Screws. And while most of these torture devices only exist in the imaginations of demented quasi-historians, your family doesn't need to know this.

Aside from facsimiles of "historic" devices (and a cash-operated novelty electric chair that vibrates and spews smoke), the museum has other random items in their collection, such as whips, chains, skulls, autographed photos of the Three Stooges (?) and Vampira (the original television horror host), a check signed by Vincent Price, and a collection of paintings and letters from John Wayne Gacy.

Knowing that this is a serial killer/rapist makes himslightly scarier than your average birthday clown.

The Museum of Historic Torture Devices is only open mid-May through mid-September, so plan your trip accordingly.

01 March 2012

Over the next month, we will be previewing all 30 MLB teams for the upcoming fantasy season. We'll go over everything from which players are new to the team, to which ones have left. Who should you draft, who should you avoid, who should you heckle, who should you stalk and send a lock of your hair to, who should you want to throw a baggie full of your own urine at. You know. All the important shit to prepare you for your draft.

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

So what about last year? More of exactly the same. They weren't any good and all of their pitchers were terrible. Remember when they used to be able to go into every season and say "Man, at least we're not Tampa Bay"?

So who's playing where? Projected lineup courtesy of Rotochamp.com. Stats are from 2011. RNK is the player's ranking at that position from our fantasy rankings.

Player

POS

2011 Team

AB

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OBP

SLG

RNK

1

Brian Roberts

2B

BAL

163

18

3

19

6

.221

.273

.331

29th

2

J.J. Hardy

SS

BAL

527

76

30

80

0

.269

.310

.491

12th

3

Nick Markakis

OF

BAL

641

72

15

73

12

.284

.351

.406

31st

4

Adam Jones

OF

BAL

567

68

25

83

12

.280

.319

.466

23rd

5

Matt Wieters

C

BAL

500

72

22

68

1

.262

.328

.450

8th

6

Mark Reynolds

DH/3B

BAL

534

84

37

86

6

.221

.323

.483

14th

7

Wilson Betemit

3B

KC/DET

323

40

8

46

4

.285

.343

.452

37th

8

Chris Davis

1B

TEX/BAL

199

25

5

19

1

.266

.305

.402

NR

9

Endy Chavez

OF

TEX

256

37

5

27

10

.301

.323

.426

NR

Who do I draft? The top of the Baltimore lineup is actually pretty good. Adam Jones looks like 25/10 is his floor, although he sucks in OBP leagues. That said, Mark Reynolds is actually incredibly good in OBP leagues, so they have something for everyone.

Who do I avoid? JJ Hardy will be lucky to get to 25 homers this year, and I say he only hits 20. Brian Roberts has more back problems than someone born with no spine (I'd like to say that sounded better in my head, but it didn't. I just don't have an ending to that particular setup.).

Who do I keep an eye on? Everyone thinks Wieters is the breakout guy this season, so I'm going to go out on a limb here and say Chris Davis finally has a breakout. And by "breakout" I mean 20 homers and an OBP no higher than .310.

So who's in the rotation? Projected lineup courtesy of Rotochamp.com. Stats are from 2011. RNK is the player's ranking at that position from our fantasy rankings.

Player

POS

2011 Team

IP

W

L

ERA

WHIP

K

BB

RNK

1

Zach Britton

SP

BAL

154.1

11

11

4.61

1.45

97

62

NR

2

Jason Hammel

SP

COL

170.1

7

13

4.76

1.43

94

68

NR

3

Wei Ying Chen

SP

Japan

164.2

8

10

2.68

1.03

94

31

106th

4

Jake Arrieta

SP

BAL

119.1

10

8

5.05

1.46

93

59

NR

5

Tsuyoshi Wada

SP

Japan

184.2

16

5

1.51

1.00

168

40

NR

Who do I draft? If you have any intentions of winning, no one.

Who do I avoid? All of them. Seriously, they're terrible. And Brian Matusz is even worse!

Who do I keep an eye on? Maybe Chris Tillman? But even he laid a giant deuce on the pitcher's mound when he got a shot last season. Pass.

What if that asshole gets hurt or starts to suck? If Jim Johnson gets hurt, I wouldn't touch Gregg with a 3 foot pole. Unless that 3 foot pole was a bat, in which case I would clobber everything Gregg threw near the plate. Just like everyone else in baseball does.

29 February 2012

Over the next month, we will be previewing all 30 MLB teams for the upcoming fantasy season. We'll go over everything from which players are new to the team, to which ones have left. Who should you draft, who should you avoid, who should you heckle, who should you stalk and send a lock of your hair to, who should you want to throw a baggie full of your own urine at. You know. All the important shit to prepare you for your draft.

ATLANTA BRAVES

So what about last year? It's really the tale of two seasons. The Braves rode a pretty competent pitching rotation and a solid, if unspectacular offense, to a fantastic 5 months. Then they went 2-53 in September and missed the playoffs, opening the door for the Cardinals to win the World Series. This places the 2011 Braves as one of my least favorite teams of all time. The 2012 team is pretty much the same. They're banking on a Jason Heyward rebound and some steady improvement from Freddie Freeman.

So who's playing where? Projected lineup courtesy of Rotochamp.com. Stats are from 2011. RNK is the player's ranking at that position from our fantasy rankings.

Player

POS

2011 Team

AB

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OBP

SLG

RNK

1

Michael Bourn

OF

HOU/ATL

656

94

2

50

61

.294

.349

.386

21st

2

Martin Prado

OF

ATL

551

66

13

57

4

.260

.302

.385

45th

3

Chipper Jones

3B

ATL

455

56

18

70

2

.275

.344

.470

25th

4

Dan Uggla

2B

ATL

600

88

36

82

1

.233

.311

.453

8th

5

Brian McCann

C

ATL

466

51

24

71

3

.270

.351

.466

3rd

6

Freddie Freeman

1B

ATL

571

67

21

76

4

.282

.346

.448

17th

7

Jason Heyward

OF

ATL

396

50

14

42

9

.227

.319

.389

35th

8

Tyler Pastornicky

SS

ATL(Minors)

--

--

--

--

--

.---

.---

.---

32nd

Who do I draft? You know what you're getting from Bourn and McCann. Their floors and ceilings aren't too far from each other. Outside of a terrible first half to 2011, the same can be said of Thuggla. I'm really high on Freddie Freeman. He's built for power, and it can show up as early as this season. Don't let his knee injury scare you off. As someone that's dislocated his kneecap many times, he'll be good in about a week.

Who do I avoid? Chipper Jones may seem like a solid option (especially to those in OBP leagues), but you'd better not go into the season with him as your main option at any position. Tyler Pastornicky is an all-glove, not-much-hit SS that can steal a few bases and easily hit in the low .200's. Red flag!

Who do I keep an eye on? Jason Heyward is the real wild card. Will he put up high-20's homers and an OBP north of .380? Or will he continue to be plagued by injuries and stay at the Nick Markakis-esque 17 HR/10 SB levels of 2011. I'm betting on something in the middle. Put him down for 80/24/80/10/.290 this season.

So who's in the rotation? Projected lineup courtesy of Rotochamp.com. Stats are from 2011. RNK is the player's ranking at that position from our fantasy rankings.

Player

POS

2011 Team

IP

W

L

ERA

WHIP

K

BB

RNK

1

Tim Hudson INJ

SP

ATL

215.0

16

10

3.22

1.14

158

56

45th

2

Tommy Hanson

SP

ATL

130.0

11

7

3.60

1.17

142

46

26th

3

Jair Jurrjens

SP

ATL

152.0

13

6

2.96

1.22

90

44

59th

4

Brandon Beachy

SP

ATL

141.2

7

3

3.68

1.21

169

46

31st

5

Mike Minor

SP

ATL

82.2

5

3

4.14

1.49

77

30

82nd

Who do I draft? Ummmm...I'm probably staying away from all of these fuckers, as I'll explain...now!

Who do I avoid? All of these fuckers. Hudson's old and has back problems (and doesn't strike anyone out anyway). Hanson's throwing motion just SCREAMS constant shoulder problems. Jair Jurrjens weighs about 130 pounds and got hurt reading this sentence. Beachy made quite a splash last season, but when I watch him on TV, I feel like his fastball is wayyy too straight and might have some home run problems on the road.

Who do I keep an eye on? Mike Minor, but not because he's good specifically. Whoever nabs the #5 spot in the rotation (Minor, Delgado, Vizcaino, Grizzly Bear) will have some talent to work with.

What if that asshole gets hurt or starts to suck? Obviously Johnny Venters is the handcuff here, but he also threw about 850 innings of relief last season, so keep an eye on any of the seven other relievers the Braves had check in with a sub-2.00 ERA last year.

28 February 2012

Eat Us takes great care to showcase the finest food and drink the Midwest has to offer. And occasionally some of the worst.

There are some foods that - how to say this nicely? - classify as White Trash Food. They're less a consumable than a line in the sand. While some foods (Jello salad, mayo sandwiches, canned hash) are debatable regionally, there's one White Trash Food that bears do debate. I speak of Steak-Umms, "America's Favorite Sliced Steak!"

Steak-Umms, born out of the stygian abyss of Reading, PA, are a sliced frozen steak product that I suspect contains little "steak." Having eaten them a time or six, I can attest that it definitively tastes of the beef trimmings that weren't quite up to boxed frozen Wal-Mart ground beef quality. It was either this or circus meat. And yes, they look as appetizing as I make them sound.

Geographically, you may be noting, they aren't even Midwestern by origin. North of Maryland and all. Yet of all the places I've lived or visited friends and loved ones, I've seen more freezer-burned telltale red boxes far and away the most in our fair region. Something about shitty meat that really seems to strike a chord around these parts.

And how to describe the taste ...

Ever visit a pioneer village or historical throwback event? And you hear weathered women talk about making candles out of fat? You may have been wondering how animal fat can be coaxed into a serviceable candle. Once you cook your first SteakUmm - microwave or pan-fry, it's shitty either way - you'll wonder no longer. A massive amount of fat leaks out, then with nowhere to go seemingly attains a limited sentience. If you listen close enough, you can hear a mournful hiss, almost like ... "killllll meeee."

Could just be the last guy to eat one of these, thouhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifgh.

Nutritionally, they're not as much of a time bomb as you'd imagine - 100 calories per ... sheet? Though 80 percent of that is from fat. You'll get decent amount of saturated fat and cholesterol, but to be honest it's nothing horrific, especially compared to Arby's or Taco Bell. No, the horror here comes entirely from the taste and appearance.

And the website.

Imagine every food you love. Now sub out the protein base and insert shitty pink sheets of low-grade beef. Viola - it can be done, and SteakUmms is here to show you how on its recipe page. Tellingly, there are no pictures for any of these. I'm fairly certain that if the Greeks had these SteakUmms gyros, they wouldn't have invented democracy. All your favorites are here, just waiting to be ruined at home! Just make sure you don't call up anything you can't put down.

I don't have any kids, but I've watched a few of them in my day. For every kid that's reasonably well behaved, there are 10 that can be scientifically labeled "bratty little assholes". And no matter how you want to take care of them, there are all of these unspoken "rules" society frowns upon breaking. The masses get their panties in a bunch if you spank your kid, or even yell at them. Even grounding your kids can get you a stern talking-to from your local SuperParent.

There are many perfectly acceptable ways to raise your kids that society seems to frown on. Add "Giving your teenagers heroin before school to help with a toothache" to the ever-growing list.

Take it away, Logan, OH!

Ohio State University Police on Friday evening arrested a mother who is accused of injecting her teenage children with heroin before sending them to school, according to ONN's affiliate WBNS.

According to investigators, Shantel A. Parker injected her children, ages 14 and 16, with heroin and had been giving them heroin and other drugs for months.

Sheriff’s deputies said that the children told them their mother started to give them drugs to treat pain for a toothache.

Hopefully this lady gets a book deal. I've been waiting for someone to expand on the potential that LSD has in potty training for years.

27 February 2012

Just over the state line from the south-side of Chicago is Hammond, Indiana. As much as the denizens of Hammond may claim otherwise, it's a drab, run-down town with an interesting past but no future. People who actually live in Chicago know that there are only a few justifiable reasons to ever go to Hammond, and they are:

Getting cheaper gas and cigarettes.

Attempting to double your paycheck at one of Northwest Indiana's many casino boats.

Purchasing fireworks.

Peering inside the windows of darkened liquor stores on Sundays because of the ridiculous blue laws that are still on the books.

But there's another reason one might want to venture to Hammond, and that reason is The John Dillinger Museum at the IndianaWelcomeCenter.

John Dillinger is a figure ingrained in Chicago's history, but a lot of the shenaniganshe pulled were across the state line. He was born in Indiana. He's buried in Indiana. In between, he robbed Indiana banks, murdered an Indiana policeman, and escaped an Indiana jail. Sure, he may have been gunned down outside The Biograph in Chicago, but the feds brought along a few vengeance-seeking Indiana cops for the assassination.

Aside from historical documents, interactive exhibits, and a life-sized wax figure of Dillinger, your $4 lets you see some interesting memorabilia associatedwith the legendary criminal, including:

The wooden gun he used to escape the Crown Point jail.

Dillinger's lucky rabbit's foot.

The pants he was wearing when he was shot.

So if you need to fill up your gas tank on the cheap or you're running low on your stash of illegal fireworks to sell out of your trunk to children in Pilsen, consider checking out this piece of Hoosier history. The Dillinger Museum is open 10am to 4pm. And, unlike Indiana liquor stores, the museum is seven days a week